Art exhibition listings

By Enru Lin / Staff reporter

Fri, Nov 15, 2013 - Page 10

Black Mist—Achiever of Light (黑色幻霧—光的成就者) is a solo exhibition of black sculptures inspired by the female figure. Contemporary sculptor Huang Ying-Pu (黃映蒲) has fashioned 22 pieces — including a pelvis, an ovary and a supine woman giving birth — that appear shrouded in shadow yet luminous, in an effort to reduce the female form to a primal maternal essence.

The Art of Crafts (承薪．成藝) brings together works by five artists at the top of their field: tin sculptor Chen Wan-neng (陳萬能), woodcarver Shi Zhen-yang (施鎮洋), lacquer artist Wang Qing-shuang (王清霜), bamboo weaver Huang Tu-shan (黃塗山) and Shi Zhi-hui (施至輝), who specializes in gilded Buddha figurines. The exhibition also offers documentary screenings and workshops taught by the artists and their apprentices. To register, visit the Arts of Crafts Web site (Chinese only) at www.cichilife.com/aoc.

The Sunday of Life (生命的禮拜天) celebrates the 100th birthday of Chang Yi-hsiung (張義雄), a Chiayi native who rose from poverty to become an acclaimed western-style painter. As a child Chang wanted to become an artist, but received little formal training due to financial hardship. Later in Japan, he cut paper silhouettes of passersby on the street to support himself. Learning mainly through trial and error, Chang riffs off western art movements such as Impressionism, Fauvism, Cubism and Expressionism, applying them to everyday people and scenes of Taiwan. On view are representative works from Chang’s career, including his famed portraits of clowns.

Lin Chien-jung (林建榮) is an installation artist best known for his “light bulb man,” a playful sculpture that turns its glass head like it’s pondering the deeper stuff of life. Lonely Island, A Self-Portrait (孤島，一種自我摹寫的狀態) is a more grotesque turn on introspection. Lin’s latest exhibition features a large gray rock that’s programmed to light up and dim rhythmically. The rock is a metaphor for the self; deeper inspection reveals nothing except slimed barnacles and black space.

Paper artist Reiko Nireki visited Greater Taichung and Chiayi to observe the locals’ relationship with ancient forests. The Wishing Tree (許願樹) is her solo exhibition on Taiwanese tree culture. Using paper and sculpture, Nireki builds a forest at MOCA Studio that’s filled with totems of local rites, such as the red charms used on the birthday of the tree god. A second room is an ode to Japanese tree culture: An ornate tree is crafted out of wrinkled layered paper and marked with a branch, which in Shinto rites constitutes a wordless apology to a tree that’s destroyed for human use.